awm, on 2020-November-04, 08:17, said:
The Senate is more problematic; Republican Susan Collins may still lose in Maine (remember the remaining votes are blue-leaning, and ranked-choice voting in Maine means her Democratic challenger likely has around 5% more votes than currently attributed to her once the independent running further to the left is eliminated).
I think you are being extremely optimistic here Adam. Collins is currently running at 49.6% and clearly has a lot more support amongst blue voters than the President. The Dem has 43.6 and the independent 4.2, so even if they transfer 100% that is only 47.8. Obviously it depends on which votes are left out there but I would hesitantly tip Collins to get to 50%+1 at this stage.
awm, on 2020-November-04, 08:17, said:
and both Georgia seats are likely to go to a run-off in January.
Not so fast on that one. Last I checked Purdue was running at 50.8%. Admittedly the outstanding votes are going to break very heavily blue but the run off, while likely, is certainly not yet a lock.
awm, on 2020-November-04, 08:17, said:
It's not the landslide one would expect if one had faith in the American people! But it's well within the range of possibilities forecast by sites like fivethirtyeight.com and at least should get Trump out of the White House.
This was sort of the point I was making earlier to Richard. The results are well within the margin of error with the main misses being the rust belt and Florida non-Mexican latinos. People were just expecting a blow out and not keeping themselves focused on the most probable paths to success.